looking directly at/toward him now

Topstudent

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I'm writing a script:

John is hiding behind a car. The officer is 40 yards away.
John waits a moment, then cautiously peeks over the hood and sees the officer looking his way.
John quickly ducks back down. His heart racing.
He takes a deep breath, then hesitates briefly before peeking over the hood again to see the officer looking directly at/toward him now.
John ducks back down behind the car and thinks.

Which one of 'at' and 'toward(s)' would you use here? Would both be okay?
 
How about 'looking right his way'?
 
Definitely at. I don't think toward works very well.
 
I'm writing a script:

John is hiding behind a car. The officer is 40 yards away.
John waits a moment, then cautiously peeks over the hood and sees the officer looking his way.
John quickly ducks back down, his heart racing.
He takes a deep breath, then hesitates briefly before peeking over the hood again to see and sees the officer is now looking directly at /toward him. now.
John ducks back down behind the car and thinks.

Which one of 'at' and 'toward(s)' would you use here? Would both either one be okay?
Note my suggestions above. I changed "both" to "either one" because, technically, asking "Would both be okay?" could be taken to mean that you want to say "... the officer looking directly at toward him".
 
Then why did you suggest it in the first place?
For some reason, initially neither 'at' nor 'toward' seemed OK to me in this context. On the other hand, later on I noticed that the OP had already used 'look someone's way' in the text.
 
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